29 March 2001
Source: Digital file from the Court Reporters Office, Southern District of New York; (212) 805-0300.

This is the transcript of Day 24 of the trial, 29 March 2001.

See other transcripts: http://cryptome.org/usa-v-ubl-dt.htm


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   1   UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

       SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

   2   ------------------------------x



   3   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA



   4              v.                           S(7)98CR1023



   5   USAMA BIN LADEN, et al.,



   6                  Defendants.



   7   ------------------------------x



   8

                                               New York, N.Y.

   9                                           March 29, 2001

                                               10:00 a.m.

  10



  11



  12   Before:



  13                       HON. LEONARD B. SAND,



  14                                           District Judge



  15



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1                            APPEARANCES



   2   MARY JO WHITE

            United States Attorney for the

   3        Southern District of New York

       BY:  PATRICK FITZGERALD

   4        MICHAEL GARCIA

            KENNETH KARAS

   5        PAUL BUTLER

            Assistant United States Attorneys

   6



   7   SAM A. SCHMIDT

            Attorneys for defendant Wadih El Hage

   8

       ANTHONY L. RICCO

   9   EDWARD D. WILFORD

       CARL J. HERMAN

  10        Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh



  11   FREDRICK H. COHN

       DAVID P. BAUGH

  12   LAURA GASIOROWSKI

            Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-'Owhali

  13

       DAVID STERN

  14   DAVID RUHNKE

            Attorneys for defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed

  15



  16            (In open court; jury not present)



  17            THE COURT:  Good morning.  You may be seated.



  18            This matter is being addressed in open court.  If at



  19   any point anybody believes that they for security reasons,



  20   meaning security in the broader sense, they wish to repair to



  21   the robing room, I should be so advised.



  22            The Court has --



  23            MR. BAUGH:  Excuse me, your Honor, for some reason --



  24            MR. COHN:  I'm going back to the interpreter's booth.



  25   We're having a problem.





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   1            (Pause)



   2            MR. COHN:  It's fine now, your Honor.  Thank you for



   3   the indulgence.



   4            THE COURT:  There has been submitted to the Court for



   5   its signature a number of subpoenas on behalf of the defendant



   6   Al-'Owhali, to which the government has made objections orally



   7   and by letter dated March 29th, which I'll mark Court Exhibit



   8   I of today's date.



   9            (Court Exhibit I marked)



  10            THE COURT:  The Court notes that there are present



  11   the defendants Al'Owhali and Odeh.  The Court stated on



  12   Tuesday the nature of this conference and said that any



  13   defendants who wished to attend might do so, but that the



  14   appearance of defendants not immediately involved in these



  15   matters was not required.



  16            I think in addressing the subpoenas it is important



  17   to understand what counsel for Mr. Al-'Owhali has advised the



  18   Court, and which is apparent from the nature of the subpoenas



  19   and their return date, these subpoenas are relevant to the



  20   penalty phase of the case, and that the context in which one



  21   will address issues of relevance and admissibility is a



  22   context in which one supposes that the jury has found the



  23   defendants guilty of crimes which carry the potential of the



  24   death penalty.



  25            So that at this stage of the case issues of guilt are





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   1   behind us and we deal with issues of mitigation or aggravating



   2   circumstances.



   3            I think we should begin with the issues relating to



   4   American military actions against Iraq.  I think then we have



   5   to consider under what circumstances the nature or extent of



   6   military actions taken by the United States against Iraq are



   7   relevant.  Subdivisions of that would be what is the relevance



   8   of military actions taken by the United States against Iraq



   9   subsequent to August 7, 1998, and what is the relevance of



  10   information which was never known to Mr. Al-'Owhali, including



  11   especially information which has never been made public and



  12   would be made public presumably for the first time by the



  13   response to the subpoena.  Mr. Baugh, first of all, just as a



  14   framework.



  15            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  16            THE COURT:  The relevance of American military action



  17   with respect to Iraq is what?



  18            MR. BAUGH:  If I may answer your question directly



  19   and then give the background, all right?



  20            THE COURT:  If you do it in that sequence I'd



  21   appreciate it.



  22            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.  Just when I thought the



  23   honeymoon was over.  I will do it in that sequence, your



  24   Honor.  The relevance would be to this.  The defendant has not



  25   only the right under the Constitution to present mitigators





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   1   and I believe in the McVeigh case he was trying to prove a



   2   mitigator by showing these things happened subsequent, but



   3   what I think the government misses and McVeigh affirms is that



   4   the defendant has the right not only to present mitigators,



   5   but to resist aggravators either to deny the existence of the



   6   fact, to rebut that the mitigator, that the aggravator is



   7   actually and aggravator -- yes, I'm sorry, that's drama



   8   training -- or to deny the existence.



   9            By that I mean, if for instance, and that was my



  10   direct answer, it is relevant to his right to rebut factually



  11   that a chosen aggravator is actually an aggravator, whether



  12   statutory or nonstatutory, as we have cited in our answer and



  13   I don't mean to belabor the point, or to be brief, Congress



  14   has stated when they reinstated the death penalty that all



  15   murders are not death qualified; that first there must be a



  16   process arising from the statutory aggravators to show that,



  17   for wont of a better term, the jurisdiction exists for the



  18   jury to consider whether or not death is appropriate.



  19            Once the government has shown the existence of



  20   aggravators that are not, that are overborne by the statutory



  21   mitigators then that qualifies the case to go to the next step



  22   where the jury will consider whether or not the nonstatutory



  23   aggravators overbear any nonstatutory mitigators and death is



  24   the only appropriate sentence.



  25            Now, if for instance, a defendant, and I'm being





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   1   hypothetical here, a defendant is charged with murder and the



   2   government were to allege, by example, that this murder is



   3   aggravated because he used a pistol, we could come in and



   4   prove, one, that he didn't use a pistol, or, two, we can say



   5   that he had to use a pistol, and the factual basis of that is



   6   minimized, or, we can say, a pistol really isn't an aggravator



   7   because everybody does it, and in the great scheme of things



   8   pistols are not unique in this.



   9            In the case before you, the United States has alleged



  10   that my client -- I won't go through all the aggravators



  11   because I know the Court is aware of them -- that the



  12   aggravators include things like my client used a weapon of



  13   mass destruction, or that my client used a weapon of mass



  14   destruction with a reckless disregard for the lives of



  15   innocents who might have been in the target area, and,



  16   further, that these people, these victims, and they are



  17   victims, were targeted solely because of their status as



  18   American citizens.



  19            Yes, sir?  I can see you have a question.



  20            THE COURT:  No, I just took my glasses off.  I'm



  21   still not used to this having on my reading glasses.



  22            MR. BAUGH:  So, therefore, if we can come in and show



  23   that this sort of activity is common and routine --



  24            THE COURT:  What sort of activity is common and



  25   routine?





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   1            MR. BAUGH:  The use of weapons of mass destruction



   2   and killing of innocents.  If we can show in this case, and



   3   this theater that is common, that would compel the jury to say



   4   that aggravator may exist, but it's not that strong.



   5            THE COURT:  You're saying that because the United



   6   States used bombs against Iraq that's a mitigator for



   7   Al-'Owhali using bombs against the embassy?



   8            MR. BAUGH:  No, sir, it is not a mitigator.  It is



   9   rebuttal to the status of the allegation as an aggravator.



  10   We're not just mitigating.  We're coming in and saying this



  11   isn't a really an aggravator in this case because it is a



  12   matter of routine in this particular case.  We're not offering



  13   a mitigator.  We are challenging, which is his right under the



  14   United States Constitution, we're challenging the status of



  15   the assertion as an actual aggravator, because, remember, your



  16   Honor  --



  17            THE COURT:  I just want to make clear again, so that



  18   we know the context in which this colloquy is taking place --



  19            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  20            THE COURT:  -- that the government has said --



  21            MR. BAUGH:  Which page are you reading from, your



  22   Honor?



  23            THE COURT:  On page 2, the last sentence of the



  24   second paragraph:  The government will argue at the guilt



  25   phase and any penalty phase that Al-'Owhali's actions --





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   1   actions emphasized -- were unlawful, entirely unreasonable,



   2   and were motivated by his political beliefs, though we will



   3   not seek to prove one way or the other whether his political



   4   beliefs themselves are reasonable, and I think that's relevant



   5   because as we know from the McVeigh case, which is in many



   6   respects quite analogous to this where McVeigh was seeking to



   7   show that law enforcement significantly mishandled Waco and



   8   the Court limited the defense to issues related to what



   9   McVeigh knew or could have known relevant to his state of



  10   mind.



  11            Then the question raised was whether the facts were,



  12   regardless of whether were McVeigh knew them or not, were



  13   relevant to the reasonableness of McVeigh's perception, and



  14   the Court analyzing the record concluded that was not a basis



  15   for admitting it.



  16            Here the government is explicitly saying, we are not



  17   going to challenge the reasonableness of his political



  18   beliefs.  The argument that I understand that you are now



  19   advancing is an argument in which Al-'Owhali's state of mind



  20   is irrelevant.  You are arguing that you should be able to



  21   argue to the jury that it is a mitigating factor with respect



  22   to Al-'Owhali's use of explosives against the embassy that the



  23   United States used and uses explosives with respect to Iraq?



  24            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, I'll try to answer the four



  25   questions you just asked.





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   1            THE COURT:  All right.



   2            MR. BAUGH:  You ganged up on me.  First, you say I am



   3   now arguing.  No, I have always argued this perspective.  I



   4   assumed that everyone knew the role that aggravators and



   5   mitigators play in determining who gets death, and the fact



   6   that a defendant has the obligation and the right not only to



   7   present mitigators but to rebut aggravators, not only to rebut



   8   them factually, but to rebut them as aggravators.



   9            THE COURT:  The aggravators that you're seeking to



  10   rebut is that Al-'Owhali used weapons of mass destruction?



  11            MR. BAUGH:  No, your Honor.  I am not rebutting the



  12   fact.  I am rebutting the assertion by the United States that



  13   the use of that aggravator in this case is so great that it



  14   qualifies to kill.  Remember in these aggravators there is a



  15   balancing test, all right?  I have the option of putting



  16   stuff, for wont of a better term, on the mitigation side and



  17   try to tip it in my favor.



  18            I also have the right, as indicated in McVeigh, over



  19   here in the aggravator side to lessen the weight or the



  20   intensity of the aggravator, not only factually but by



  21   comparison to other cases and other uses.  So, no, when you



  22   said that I'm now saying that it's not mitigating, no, -- I'm



  23   sorry -- I'm not saying it is a mitigator.  The purpose of



  24   this information is to lessen the effect of the aggravator.  I



  25   also want to point out what I --





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   1            THE COURT:  Tell me how, what lessens the effect of



   2   the use of weapons of mass destruction?



   3            MR. BAUGH:  As the Court is aware factually in this



   4   case, because while we are to a certain extent fortunate



   5   because under 801(d)(2)(E), the United States has presented



   6   all of these fatwas of the organization that my client is



   7   charged with conspiring with, additionally, we have



   8   Mr. Gaudin's recitation of my client's statement, his coerced



   9   statement, wherein he says, he is doing -- it's motivation --



  10   but also, not only is it motivation, but, additionally, he's



  11   talking about things that were in his knowledge about the



  12   gravity of the situation.  Specifically, as we have pointed



  13   out in our answer, and also in Mr. Bin Laden's fatwas, the



  14   reason the people in this organization, this al Qaeda, the



  15   reason they hate Americans, they hate me, they hate us, is



  16   because they say we have done certain things, and that these



  17   things are being done to them are being done to them



  18   frequently.



  19            We are saying that we can lessen -- if we have access



  20   to this information, and, by the way I'm not even getting to



  21   the admissibility standards yet, because we're just talking



  22   now about duces tecum standards, and if the admissibility



  23   standard is a 401 standard the duces tecum standard is real



  24   low, I mean low so you can step over it.  That the access to



  25   this information will permit us to develop information that





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   1   will challenge the sufficiency of whether or not these



   2   aggravators can be used.  I'm not saying that by your granting



   3   these duces tecums you are saying, Mr. Baugh, you can have



   4   this information, and, by the way, it's admissible.



   5            THE COURT:  You know, maybe we have to be a little



   6   more specific.



   7            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.  I have the list in front of



   8   me.



   9            THE COURT:  You asked in the subpoena directed to the



  10   General who is in charge of the Central Command the total



  11   number of United States aircraft based in Kuwait and Saudi



  12   Arabia during any part of any years since the cease fire in



  13   the Gulf War.



  14            I don't expect that is a request which is calculated



  15   to invite an objection, but apart from that, tell me how any



  16   of that information dealing with events unknown to the



  17   defendant and subsequent to the bombing lessens the aggravator



  18   of the use on his part of weapons of mass destruction in



  19   bombing the embassy.



  20            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, thank you.  Here is what,



  21   here is the aggravator attack.  One of the aggravators alleged



  22   by the United States against my client, one of the



  23   nonstatutory is lack of remorse.  They are saying that because



  24   my client is not sitting here feeling bad for his actions he



  25   should die.





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   1            In the fatwa of June 1998 which was read in this



   2   court, and is admitted in the record and predates the bombing,



   3   Mr. Usama Bin Laden said:  We must declare jihad against the



   4   United States -- and believe me, I didn't know all this stuff



   5   before -- we must declare jihad against the United States



   6   because the Prophet said that there should be no two forces,



   7   there shouldn't be Americans on the peninsula, and that we are



   8   religiously bound to drive them out.  Now, he said that.



   9            My client, on the other hand, assuming the theory of



  10   the United States is correct as alleged in their indictment,



  11   they are saying that my client bought into this theory, and



  12   was convinced that in order to do what is perceived as a



  13   dictate from Allah, they must do this.



  14            But there is not just motivation.  If my client



  15   because of acts that have occurred subsequent to 1998, if the



  16   United States has used the Gulf War to get military forces



  17   into Saudi Arabia and leave them there, that would explain his



  18   lack of remorse today.  Lack of remorse is not measured from



  19   on the date of offense.  It is whether or not at the time of



  20   sentencing he exhibits remorse.  If the action since 1998



  21   proved in my client's mind the correctness of his position,



  22   that explains his lack of remorse, because what was told by --



  23            THE COURT:  The correctness of his position that?



  24            MR. BAUGH:  I'm sorry.  I didn't hear the first word.



  25            THE COURT:  Correctness of his position that --





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   1   finish the sentence.



   2            MR. BAUGH:  All right.  That his lack of remorse



   3   today is, in his estimation, justified because what he was



   4   told would happen, did happen, and that --



   5            THE COURT:  How does anything of which he does not



   6   have knowledge reflect on the reasons for his lack of remorse?



   7            MR. BAUGH:  Well, first, your Honor --



   8            THE COURT:  I want to also say in the context of this



   9   issue that you have sought to subpoena various information



  10   agencies allied with supporters of Iraq.



  11            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, well, not supporters, but, yes.



  12            THE COURT:  I'm choosing my words carefully,



  13   information agencies who --



  14            MR. BAUGH:  Who are knowledgeable of the situation.



  15            THE COURT:  -- are knowledgeable of the situation and



  16   who have, like Friends of Iraq.  That's not the exact name.



  17   But who have an identification of that nature.  And presumably



  18   they will present evidence of those things which were known



  19   and which deal with the nature of America's retaliations or



  20   aggressions, depending on your viewpoint, with respect to



  21   Iraq, which were known or could have been known to the



  22   defendant both at the time of the bombing and at the time of



  23   his lack of remorse.



  24            MR. BAUGH:  No.  Now, I understand.  Your Honor,



  25   there are two answers to your question, both of which are





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   1   accurate.  The first one is, no criticism intended, but you



   2   must take yourself outside of the mitigation evaluation



   3   process.



   4            What I'm saying is this.  If the United States said



   5   that my client should die because he has a reckless disregard



   6   and he used weapons of mass destruction against Americans, and



   7   they say that qualifies under the law as an aggravator and



   8   should be balanced against mitigators, if, by example I



   9   introduce evidence that it's almost like saying:  United



  10   States, you're alleging this man is wrong because he does



  11   this, and I can present evidence that the United States has



  12   purposely prior to 1998, and continues to this day to



  13   intentionally pollute the water system of this nation, Iraq,



  14   causing the death of a half million children.  I have a



  15   videotape over there dated the summer of 1998 where Madeline



  16   Albright in a 60 Minutes interview -- I have a transcript as



  17   well -- said:  We know we've killed a half million children



  18   but we think the price is worth it.



  19            Now, the question is when the jury hears that, will



  20   they to a certain extent lessen the importance of the



  21   government assertion that the fact that a bomb was used is a



  22   true criteria for who lives and dies?  Because if that's true,



  23   then when Madeline Albright, I mean, if she ever gets



  24   prosecuted, she's in trouble.



  25            So what we're doing is we are legally attacking the





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   1   sufficiency of the aggravator in the balancing test as an



   2   aggravator.  We are not putting stuff on the mitigation side.



   3   We are lessening the weight.  We're lessening the impact



   4   legally and factually then of the government's assertion of



   5   aggravation.  And I also want to point out when you say -- and



   6   I must say this, because I know that the --



   7            THE COURT:  I'm really trying to understand this.



   8            MR. BAUGH:  Can I explain --



   9            THE COURT:  You're not saying two wrongs make a



  10   right.



  11            MR. BAUGH:  No, your Honor, that's not my job.



  12            THE COURT:  And you're not saying --



  13            MR. BAUGH:  That would be justification.



  14            THE COURT:  And you're not saying that it is less



  15   shocking, to use a lay term, less shocking that the defendant



  16   caused the death of hundreds of innocent Kenyans because



  17   America in its actions with respect to Iraq also caused the



  18   death of countless people.  Is that the argument?



  19            MR. BAUGH:  Not quite.  If I might, your Honor, can I



  20   answer your question with a question?



  21            Let me ask the question you should ask of me, all



  22   right?  Mr. Baugh, under McVeigh how is this appropriate?  And



  23   here is the answer.  If Mr. Jones in the McVeigh trial instead



  24   of trying to prove motivation had tried to prove that the



  25   aggravator does not really amount to a valid aggravator, then





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   1   this opinion in McVeigh wouldn't control.  McVeigh only limits



   2   evidence of motivation on a mitigator.  It does not limit, and



   3   in fact, they come out and say that he can rebut any issue



   4   that's raised.  McVeigh doesn't say that.



   5            So if you were to ask me that question, I would say,



   6   counsel for Mr. McVeigh, rather than alleging this as purely



   7   motivation, should have challenged the sufficiency of the



   8   aggravator, and I'm assuming they used the weapon of mass



   9   destruction as an aggravator.  I have not seen the death



  10   notice and I couldn't find it over the weekend.  If they had



  11   challenged the aggravator as sufficient, then it would have



  12   been admissible.



  13            Now, remember --



  14            THE COURT:  And would lessen the significance of the



  15   aggravator is what?



  16            MR. BAUGH:  I'm sorry, is what?  I'm not being coy.



  17   I'll really trying to follow you.



  18            THE COURT:  What is it, articulate for me what is it



  19   that lessens the weight or the significance of the aggravator



  20   of use of weapons of mass destruction?



  21            MR. BAUGH:  I'm sorry, your Honor, I'm trying to read



  22   the note of my co-counsel, and it's really dreadful.



  23            THE COURT:  You say it's not two wrongs making a



  24   right?



  25            MR. BAUGH:  No, your Honor, that would be





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   1   justification.



   2            THE COURT:  And you're not saying the fact that



   3   hundreds of people die in the bombing, which is the subject of



   4   this case, you're not saying, well, that's mitigated by the



   5   fact that America's actions caused death of hundreds of



   6   people.  So tell me --



   7            MR. BAUGH:  What I'm saying your Honor --



   8            THE COURT:  -- what it is that reduces the weight or



   9   the significance of the aggravating factor of use of weapons



  10   of mass destruction?



  11            MR. BAUGH:  I have been able to decipher the



  12   brilliance of my co-counsel.  What I'm saying, your Honor, is



  13   that because the use of weapons of mass destruction and the



  14   death of innocents is an accepted norm in this nature of



  15   warfare or in this nature of conflict, and, therefore, the



  16   impact of the aggravator should be lessened, and if the jury



  17   agrees --



  18            THE COURT:  The more prevalent, the more prevalent a



  19   terrorist act causing the death of innocent bystanders, the



  20   more prevalent that is the less weight there is to the fact



  21   that that occurred in this instance?



  22            MR. BAUGH:  No, your Honor, not less that it



  23   occurred.  Less weight should be given to it if proven that it



  24   occurred.  I'm assuming they can prove -- I mean.



  25            THE COURT:  We're past the guilt stage.  I tried to





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   1   make that clear.



   2            MR. BAUGH:  Yes.



   3            THE COURT:  I want to point that out.  The jury has



   4   unanimously found beyond a reasonable doubt that your client



   5   intentionally caused the death of hundreds of people.



   6            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



   7            THE COURT:  So we're not arguing justification and



   8   we're not arguing guilt.  I'm just trying to understand.



   9            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir, I know.



  10            THE COURT:  You're saying, reading your learned



  11   colleague's note, that the fact that it's a norm impacts on



  12   the significance of it, but when I paraphrase that and say,



  13   you're saying that the more prevalent terrorist bombing



  14   killing innocents are the less significant it becomes?  You



  15   know if that's the argument you want to make to the jury, I



  16   think the government would be well advised to wish you God



  17   speed.



  18            MR. BAUGH:  Well, if answering yes gets me past this



  19   point I'll say yes, and we'll move on to the next issue.



  20            I believe I'm entitled to see this information to see



  21   if there is -- this is a duces tecum.  We're not talking



  22   admissibility here.  We're talking whether I have access to



  23   the information.  If there is evidence to support this, and I



  24   will tell the Court we are confident that it does, because for



  25   instance, I notice in their brief they say that I had the





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   audacity to ask for a digitalized subset of wound studies.



   2   This is the wound data and munitions effectiveness team at the



   3   US hospital.  It's a military website.  And it brags about the



   4   fact that they have computerized subsets of lethality studies.



   5   So they have this stuff.  So if I get access to this, and with



   6   consultation with my co-counsel, and in consultation with my



   7   client we determine that we should assert this position, then



   8   we can.



   9            I would also point out that as has been pointed out



  10   in the Friend opinion, the aggravator by its very nature is



  11   supposed to be --



  12            THE COURT:  What opinion are you --



  13            MR. BAUGH:  Friends.  We cited the F. Supp. from



  14   Judge Payne in Richmond.  The aggravator by its nature in



  15   order to get around the affirmance issue must be unique and



  16   individualized.



  17            The proposed rebuttal is an attempt to take the



  18   impact of that aggravator out of the class of factors that are



  19   unique or individualized, and it's nothing to do with



  20   motivation.  It's nothing to do with mitigation.  It has to do



  21   with rebutting whether or not, how much weight should be given



  22   to this aggravator when and if proven.



  23            Now, in saying that it is important that we go back



  24   to the original death penalty cases and understand and reflect



  25   upon the phases, the guilt phase which is distinct, then we





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   have the statutory phase, then we have the nonstatutory phase.



   2   I mean we have, there is one penalty phase, but the



   3   deliberation process is two-fold.



   4            Anywhere in that deliberation process there are two



   5   balancing tests or weighing considerations the jury is



   6   supposed to give, and as I point out, any weight I can take



   7   off their aggravator not only should I do, but my client under



   8   McVeigh and under I think it's Gardener opinion we cited,



   9   gives him a Constitutional right to do it.  He must do it.



  10            Now, going back to the duces tecum standard, I can



  11   show you that everything I've asked for exists, and I mean



  12   when you see my vouchers with all that Internet time it's not



  13   wasted.  That's what I'm doing.  All this stuff is on the



  14   Internet and it exists.



  15            THE COURT:  When you say "all this stuff," the total



  16   number of US aircraft based in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia during



  17   any part of any years?



  18            MR. BAUGH:  I can tell you based on an Internet site



  19   that there are American squadrons that were not there prior to



  20   the Gulf War, that are there.  Now, and Mr. Bin Laden several



  21   of his fatwas that were read here said, that the United States



  22   used the Gulf War as a subterfuge to put troops in the



  23   peninsula.  And he did say that and the Court heard it.  And



  24   if you check the websites for various fighter squadrons you



  25   will find, and, also, I will tell you I know the Virginia Air





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   Guard sends aircraft over there to serve tours that did not go



   2   before the Gulf War.



   3            Now, we're now going beyond the aggravator situation.



   4   You've changed subjects on me, but --



   5            THE COURT:  Yes.



   6            MR. BAUGH:  Well, you did.



   7            THE COURT:  Okay.



   8            MR. BAUGH:  Excuse me?



   9            THE COURT:  Yes.



  10            MR. BAUGH:  It's a Socratic process.  I'm used to it.



  11            THE COURT:  You said all that you asked for, and I



  12   was simply rebutting that.



  13            MR. BAUGH:  You were checking me.  You were checking



  14   me.



  15            I will also tell the Court that just as an aside to



  16   my personal knowledge I was exposed to being in the military.



  17   My father is retired Air Force fighter pilot.  Believe me I



  18   know all this stuff.  I was raised on military bases.



  19            When I asked, well, the other things we asked for I



  20   know from my training and experience, I know from my Internet



  21   investigation and research, I know from the people in my



  22   office who are so smart, I know that these things exist.  I



  23   know that they could have the potential.  And that's the only



  24   standard I have now on the duces tecum.  They do have the



  25   potential for me and my co-counsel to be able to utilize these





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   assets once we get them.



   2            I also want to point out one other thing.  There is a



   3   unique legal issue you're going to have to resolve for the



   4   first time.  The government has objected to my subpoenas for



   5   Madeline Albright and certain of these records under the Code



   6   of Federal Regulations.



   7            What I find interesting in the, and we cited it in



   8   our letter, McVeigh asserts a Constitutional standard of



   9   relevancy at a 401 level to acquire information and present



  10   information on the penalty phase.



  11            The Code of Federal Regulations creates a much higher



  12   standard that the government can determine whether or not to



  13   answer my subpoena.  So I have a Constitutional right



  14   mentioned in McVeigh, and we have some CFR paragraph stating



  15   the government can decide the relevancy of these things, and



  16   that's not the standard, and, of course, I've got a



  17   Constitutional standard that controls.



  18            It is the Court's job to determine relevancy, not the



  19   United States government.  So I'm objecting to that portion.



  20   In fact, I'm also objecting to a certain extent, now, with



  21   Madeline Albright we went in and supplemented yesterday, I



  22   buckled, I said, I'm going to do it, because time is of the



  23   essence, but, actually, I would say that the CFR --



  24            THE COURT:  You raises again an issue which we



  25   addressed during the testimony of Ambassador Bushnell, the





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   relevance of the alleged failure of the United States to alert



   2   Kenyans to the threat of bombing?  Now we're dealing



   3   hypothetically in the sentencing phase.



   4            MR. BAUGH:  You changed gears again on me, okay.



   5            THE COURT:  I change again and this time I signaled



   6   I'm changing.



   7            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.  Thank you.



   8            THE COURT:  Another issue, right?



   9            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  10            THE COURT:  And tell me, you know, I analogized that



  11   in my guilt phase in my May 6th memorandum.



  12            MR. BAUGH:  Oh, I remember the May 6th memorandum.



  13   Yes, I remember that one.



  14            THE COURT:  But can you tell me --



  15            MR. BAUGH:  The lawful effect of this?



  16            THE COURT:  This isn't a comparative negligence case,



  17   right?  Tell me what is the relevance to the fact that the



  18   United States didn't say to Kenyan authorities:  Look, we've



  19   got this embassy and, we have all kinds of services and things



  20   that we conduct in the embassy, but you should stay away from



  21   it because there is a potential terrorist target.



  22            MR. BAUGH:  I am only hesitant because it's hard to



  23   keep my personal views out of this.  When I was



  24   cross-examining Mr. al-Fadl, Jamal al-Fadl, the first



  25   government informant, when he told this Court that part of his





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   job in 1994 -- I'm sorry -- 1996 was to find a million and a



   2   half dollars worth of atomic explosives or raw material to



   3   make a device, and that they were targeting US embassies, and



   4   that this information was not disseminated, or whether it was



   5   disseminated or not became very significant to me.  That's



   6   like saying:  Can I come stay in your house?  Of course you



   7   can.  By the way, the mafia's after me.  That's relevant.



   8            If the United States knew as early as 1996 when Mr.



   9   al-Fadl came in and gave up the ghost and told all this, if



  10   the United States chose not to warn those people who could be



  11   injured by this, is that a reckless disregard for human life,



  12   not two wrongs make a right.



  13            THE COURT:  Let's take the countervailing.  Let us



  14   say that every time there is any information that any public



  15   facility, take the hypothetical, this courthouse, is a



  16   potential target for terrorist activity, there is an



  17   obligation to tell people, you come here at your own risk.



  18   What a tremendous weapon that would give to terrorists to



  19   modify the lifestyles of almost any aspect of public life.



  20            MR. BAUGH:  Two issues, your Honor.  First, being a



  21   Judge you and I have sworn an oath not to worry about the



  22   security.  I mean we're supposed to just protect the



  23   Constitution, period, dot, and if the United States doesn't



  24   want that to happen, they shouldn't bring a death notice



  25   because I mean if we don't have a penalty phase, we don't have





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   that problem.  But, more importantly I think to qualify



   2   Mr. Bin Laden as any threat greatly underestimates -- remember



   3   that when in 1996 the first time I found out about it was in



   4   this courtroom and you, too, there are people out there trying



   5   to find nuclear material to use in a "terrorist attack," and



   6   by the way --



   7            THE COURT:  What is going to happen?  Tell me what



   8   you would argue to the jury should happen when any such



   9   intelligence information is gathered?  Understand, I have a



  10   vivid recollection.  It wasn't in this courtroom.  It was two



  11   floors below.  The jury was about to deliberate in a



  12   waterfront organized crime case, and the Chief Judge burst in



  13   and said, there is a bomb threat, everybody leave, which we



  14   did.  It became the subject of argument the following day.



  15            But the number of threats one receives are very great



  16   and the greater the disruption which will occur by virtue of



  17   the threats, the more incentive there is for the making of



  18   threats.



  19            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor.



  20            THE COURT:  I take it this is something, you know, at



  21   one point the point was made that it's the government's fault



  22   that I wasn't caught sooner, before I could have committed



  23   these crimes, and, you know, we don't really pay too much



  24   attention to that type of argument.



  25            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, that's three questions.  The





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   last one I'll answer first.  The school yard mentality of



   2   you're another one, or you did it to me first, I don't think



   3   the jury would go with that.  However, the answer to your



   4   question is, you asked me what should be done when information



   5   concerning terrorist threat --



   6            THE COURT:  Let me modify my question.  What is the



   7   relevance in this case to the culpability of the defendant --



   8            MR. BAUGH:  It's not culpability, your Honor.



   9            THE COURT:  -- to the appropriateness of a death



  10   penalty in this case that no warning were given to Kenyans?



  11            MR. BAUGH:  Again, your Honor, you can criticize me



  12   and ask again if you want to.  I'll answer your question with



  13   a question.



  14            Two points.  One is in making that determination of



  15   what should be done with that information, does the person



  16   making the determination have to weigh in their own mind the



  17   potential impact of that destruction on innocents in making



  18   their decision?  And the answer is yes.  So, therefore, if I



  19   say in my own mind I think the risk is worth it, does that



  20   impact on an assertion that my client has shown disregard for



  21   human life?



  22            By example again, if this Court, not as a robed



  23   federal judge, receives information that there is an airplane



  24   coming at the City of New York, there are 213 innocents aboard



  25   and a number of terrorists, and on board is a nuke device, and





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   they're going to crash it into New York, and they're going to



   2   kill a million people, do you risk the death of those 213 or



   3   is that reckless disregard?



   4            I am saying, your Honor, that the United States has



   5   alleged that my client is showing reckless disregard.  I am



   6   saying that reckless disregard for innocents in this area is



   7   as routine, as everyday as water.



   8            THE COURT:  Reckless disregard.  You are equating



   9   reckless disregard --



  10            MR. BAUGH:  I'm equating disregard.



  11            THE COURT:  -- to the blowing up of the embassy on a



  12   main thoroughfare in Nairobi to the failure to warn of a



  13   rather amorphous threat?



  14            MR. BAUGH:  Excuse me, your Honor.  Wait.  First, a



  15   rather amorphous -- and informant who was paid nine hundred



  16   grand --



  17            THE COURT:  Before you answer that --



  18            MR. BAUGH:  Okay.



  19            THE COURT:  -- tell me what should have happened?



  20   Should the embassy have been cordoned off?  Should a lot of



  21   those victims -- we had the woman who was just on the bus who



  22   was going by.  Should the buses have been diverted?  Should



  23   pedestrians not have been permitted in front of the embassy?



  24            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, I will answer that question.



  25   What's going to happen is this -- what ought to happen?  We





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   should stop killing each other.  We should stop that.  That's



   2   what we should do.  And believe me, that's not a flip answer.



   3            But, more importantly, every time you make a decision



   4   that could possibly risk the lives of "innocents," that is an



   5   issue that the jury should consider in determining whether or



   6   not that aggravator justified this man's dying, period.  Yes,



   7   it should.  I'm not talking about justification.  I'm not



   8   talking about motivation.  I'm talking about attacking the



   9   validity and weight to be given the aggravator in the weighing



  10   process that is mandated by the statute.  I'm talking straight



  11   law.  I'm not talking, and I agree with you.



  12            And some day when this trial is over I hope you and I



  13   get a chance to sit down and we can talk about these



  14   questions.  No, I'm serious.  We argued these things over



  15   there on John Street.  We discussed these things.  We very



  16   often slide off into what-ifs, and it is, but that's not the



  17   issue here.



  18            The issue here now is have I met the threshhold under



  19   less than 401 to show that I should have access to this



  20   information so later you can determine whether or not it's



  21   admissible, and I can determine later whether or not I want to



  22   implement that tactic, which is permissible and required under



  23   McVeigh.  And I'm not shorting your question by the way.



  24            THE COURT:  Excuse me?



  25            MR. BAUGH:  I'm not ducking out of your question, I





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   don't think.  I'm not avoiding answering your question.  I



   2   really think I am answering your question.  If I'm not, you



   3   can ask it again.  But you keep asking three at a time and



   4   it's hard to keep track of them.



   5            THE COURT:  Is there anything that you want to tell



   6   me that I've cut you off about?



   7            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor --



   8            THE COURT:  I have all day.



   9            MR. BAUGH:  No, your Honor.  I want you to know that



  10   you know if I thought were you cutting me off, I'd tell you



  11   and I do not believe, in fact, I believe you were honestly --



  12   I'm not going to say that because people will say I'm getting



  13   lax in my old age -- but I believe you are trying to determine



  14   and I will tell the Court without slighting you, that the



  15   problem is looking at what McVeigh does and not looking at



  16   what McVeigh stops short of doing, and the fact that if you go



  17   back to Gregg and Forman and the cases that led to the federal



  18   death penalty statute, and you review the phases, that what we



  19   are seeking to do here, which what Mr. McVeigh's counsel



  20   should have done is challenged the validity of the aggravator



  21   and weakened it's impact.  I will also close by saying --



  22            THE COURT:  Before you close.



  23            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  24            THE COURT:  Bin Laden was asked in the interview



  25   which is in evidence --





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1            MR. BAUGH:  One of the many, yes.



   2            THE COURT:  -- what would be required to end the



   3   terrorist activity.  And his reply was:  The withdrawal of all



   4   American forces from the Arabian peninsula.  When you say, the



   5   answer is the to stop the killing, to what extent, if any, do



   6   you think you are entitled to argue to the jury that error in



   7   American foreign policy is a relevant consideration in



   8   determining the appropriateness of the death penalty here?



   9            (Continued on next page)



  10



  11



  12



  13



  14



  15



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1            MR. BAUGH:  I'm going to make a deliberate effort to



   2   duck your question by answering it this way.  The question is



   3   not, now am I entitled to argue?  The question now is, am I



   4   entitled to have access to the information to determine



   5   whether or not I have a valid argument and come to this Court



   6   and prove the admissibility of the standard under 401?



   7            Now, if you want me to go farther than that, I will,



   8   but I would submit that would be the first part.  And in



   9   response to that, if a given fact in support of an aggravator



  10   becomes more and more common in a given area or in a given



  11   offense, does that, could that have the potential to lessen



  12   the impact of it?  And the answer must be a resounding yes,



  13   and --



  14            THE COURT:  I know I'm interrupting you.



  15            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  16            THE COURT:  Again you are arguing that the prevalence



  17   of terrorist acts lessens their significance for purposes of



  18   the death penalty, and that strikes me as being a very tenuous



  19   argument.



  20            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, it is very hard -- well, the



  21   Court might view it as a tenuous argument.  However, first,



  22   the Court uses the word "terrorism" a lot and the government



  23   does, too.  And the government does have a definition of



  24   "terrorism" and I think it's a pretty good definition.



  25            THE COURT:  Tell me what word you would rather have





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   me use.



   2            MR. BAUGH:  What word I would rather use is "warfare"



   3   between established states and non-established states.  That's



   4   what it is.



   5            I can tell the Court from my ROTC training, generally



   6   recognized there are two types of bombings, strategic and



   7   tactical.  Strategic is a wiping out of facilities, wiping out



   8   petroleum facilities, for example.  Tactical are destroying



   9   its troop assets, its tank farm, its aircraft.



  10            Whenever you drop bombs with the intention to coerce



  11   the people into trying to stop a given course of action,



  12   which, by the way, is the definition given in Title 18,



  13   whenever you try to coerce a political result by bombing and



  14   killing people, that is classified under the federal code as



  15   terrorism.



  16            Unfortunately, we do it, they do it, everybody does



  17   it.  We all attempt to coerce political results through the



  18   use of force and the destruction and death of innocents.



  19            THE COURT:  But stating the equation that way --



  20   let's talk about McVeigh -- puts McVeigh on the par with



  21   United States law enforcement; would put any terrorist --



  22            I'm using terrorism.



  23            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir, and I'm not finished.  I



  24   understand.



  25            THE COURT:  -- as for these purposes, as use of





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   instruments of mass destruction --



   2            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



   3            THE COURT:  -- against targets, a large component of



   4   which are civilian innocents, for purposes of making some



   5   political point or applying some coercion.



   6            And it seems to me that your argument, when you



   7   analogize that the warfare, etc., is to say that everybody who



   8   is capable of manufacturing instruments of mass destruction --



   9   and the state-of-the-art now makes that quite easy for people



  10   to do -- is on the same par as the government because you are



  11   dealing with warfare between the two.



  12            MR. BAUGH:  I am hesitant to answer this, but I think



  13   it's important that you understand my perspective for my



  14   argument.



  15            No, your Honor, I'm not saying that.  I'm saying that



  16   that man over there is a person accused under the laws of the



  17   United States and he has been entitled to certain



  18   Constitutional protections, and under my oath and your oath,



  19   our sole purpose in being here is to make sure that those



  20   protections continue.



  21            THE COURT:  I have no quarrel with that at all.



  22            MR. BAUGH:  Notice, however, that we are not charged



  23   when we took our oaths, we don't take an oath to a flag or



  24   even to a government, we take an oath to a philosophy that



  25   protects him.  If we were on the street, my answer might be





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   different, but in here, in front of you, the only issue is



   2   under that Constitution, does he have a right to look under



   3   these records to determine if there is evidence there; and,



   4   number two, if we find it, and I know we will --



   5            THE COURT:  Evidence that the United States was



   6   engaged in warfare against Iraq; evidence that the United



   7   States has sought to impose sanctions which have caused great



   8   hardships, evidence that the United States sought to --



   9            MR. BAUGH:  I can tell from the question --



  10            THE COURT:  Please, please.  I have the right to



  11   interrupt you.  You don't.



  12            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  13            THE COURT:  It's not a level playing field.



  14            MR. BAUGH:  Another myth shattered.



  15            THE COURT:  -- that the United States sought military



  16   retaliation.



  17            You can equate those two?  You can equate an



  18   individual bombing to the governmental responses?



  19            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, that's not the issue.  If you



  20   want to ask me outside, I'll say coming from a country that



  21   was born of revolution, you bet I can.  However, that's not



  22   the question.



  23            The question is, whether or not the jury could,



  24   listening to -- that's the next question.  The first question



  25   is whether or not evidence of this could lead to admissible





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   evidence under a 401 standard which could compel a jury or



   2   even influence a jury to lessen the impact of the aggravators



   3   that are alleged by the United States in its death notice.



   4   That's the sole question.



   5            THE COURT:  This says the quantity, the cost, the



   6   impact.



   7            MR. BAUGH:  Cost.



   8            THE COURT:  Oh, yes, you ask for the cost.  Your



   9   subpoena asked what has been the cost to the United States.



  10            MR. BAUGH:  Oh, yes.  I'll tell you, you want me to



  11   go to the cost?  I tell you why --



  12            THE COURT:  Let me --



  13            MR. BAUGH:  I'm sorry.  I'm trying to keep track.



  14            THE COURT:  Finish your thought and then let's look



  15   at the specific subpoenas and the specific information that



  16   you say you wish, and let's try to then have you tell me again



  17   why you think it's appropriate, recognizing the threshold that



  18   you have to surmount is very, very low.



  19            MR. BAUGH:  I will abandon my answer because you have



  20   abandoned your question.



  21            THE COURT:  All right.



  22            MR. BAUGH:  We will move on to the other items.



  23            THE COURT:  Let's look at what you have asked of the



  24   United States Central Command.



  25            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir, I have the list before me.





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1            THE COURT:  First thing, "a list of all Iraqi targets



   2   struck by the United States and ally" -- let's assume that's



   3   to be "allied forces since the conclusion of the Gulf War and



   4   the date of each strike, either by aircraft, manned or



   5   unmanned, the locations attacked, including the government to



   6   the geographic locations, using the city name or region of the



   7   Country of Iraq, if appropriate, and the nature or type of



   8   target, i.e., water treatment facility, communication,



   9   electrical grid or radar station."



  10            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.  Okay.



  11            THE COURT:  Yes.  You need all of that for these



  12   purposes?



  13            MR. BAUGH:  Without giving the government a peek at



  14   everything, but just enough to meet my burden, I would submit,



  15   your Honor, that if the United States -- and first, your



  16   Honor, these things exist because there are pre-strike and



  17   post-strike photos of every air strike.  That is a matter of



  18   routine.  So I know it exists.



  19            THE COURT:  Are there post?



  20            MR. BAUGH:  There's pre-strike and post-strike



  21   damage.



  22            THE COURT:  We have not addressed from the government



  23   the extent to which this is classified information, and I



  24   assume we will.  We've been trying to kind of deal with this



  25   apart from that, but --





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   1            MR. BAUGH:  First, I want to answer the classified



   2   information.  Can I answer that one first?



   3            THE COURT:  Yes, and when you answer that would you



   4   also answer -- you're making a very broad philosophical-type



   5   argument which, although you have worded it several times, you



   6   probably best expressed it when you said this is warfare.



   7   Even if one were to assume, arguendo, that you are entitled to



   8   show that a state of warfare exists, is it necessary or



   9   relevant to that argument?  That argument you can make based



  10   on the information that you get from your other subpoenas, to



  11   which the government has not objected, to know in this detail.



  12            MR. BAUGH:  First, your Honor, in answer to your



  13   question, I'm sure the Iraqis know where there have been



  14   bombs, so I don't think it's a security issue.  They get



  15   bombed, I guess they know it.  So the only people who don't



  16   know it are you and me.  The Americans know -- the American



  17   Air Force knows and the Iraqis know.



  18            THE COURT:  And the nature or type of target?



  19            MR. BAUGH:  They know it, too.



  20            THE COURT:  They know if the targets were missed?



  21            MR. BAUGH:  Excuse me?



  22            THE COURT:  We know that happens with some frequency.



  23            MR. BAUGH:  I'm assuming they don't miss that much,



  24   but that could be an error on my part.  By getting this



  25   information --





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   1            THE COURT:  And you talk about "representative" -- I



   2   don't know what that means -- "pre-strike photographs and



   3   other forms of visual imagery, including the proximity of the



   4   target area to homes, other residences and non-military



   5   strictures and facilities" [sic].



   6            MR. BAUGH:  By "representative," I don't mean -- you



   7   don't have to give me all of them, and by "visual imagery," I



   8   include infrared or digitalized inventory that doesn't include



   9   photographs.



  10            THE COURT:  "And inventory and list of all weapons



  11   expended during each of the strikes and attacks listed above."



  12            Do you think that is necessary for your argument, or



  13   do you think that might create some --



  14            MR. BAUGH:  Would the use of a fuel air 750-pound



  15   weapon against a small structure increase the likelihood of --



  16   and I hate to use this term -- collateral damage?  And the



  17   answer is yes.  So, therefore, if they are using fuel air or



  18   if they are using solid or submunitions, that could determine



  19   whether or not they have increased a certain recklessness or



  20   concern about innocents.



  21            THE COURT:  All right, maybe I should hear the



  22   government.



  23            Before I hear from the government, does anybody else



  24   want to be heard on these issues?



  25            MR. RUHNKE:  No, your honor.





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   1            THE COURT:  Mr. Ruhnke, let me address a question to



   2   you.  Mr. Baugh correctly points out that the issue before me



   3   now is not admissibility, and we could let this play its



   4   course.  Perhaps that would be the most prudent thing to do,



   5   but you know that we will be spending vast amounts of time on



   6   objections made to these opinions, and I'm sure that the



   7   communications media, the subpoenas, I think every network



   8   will be in with motions to quash.



   9            And so I somehow have the impression that counsel



  10   feel pressed, so that if there is a way where, preserving



  11   everyone's rights, we can more quickly get to the quick, it



  12   might be useful.  Whether it's one trial or two really doesn't



  13   matter.  If there are two trials, I understand it is the wish



  14   of the defendants and their clients -- your client -- that



  15   there be a second trial.



  16            MR. RUHNKE:  Yes, your Honor.



  17            THE COURT:  And the same jury will have heard all of



  18   this.  Do you have any views which you wish to express as to



  19   these issues being presented to the jury?



  20            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, it is not our present



  21   intention, nor do I perceive it to become our future



  22   intention, to offer this kind of defense or this kind of



  23   mitigation in our case.  We have different clients who come



  24   from different circumstances, etc.  I do not disrespect what



  25   Mr. Baugh is doing, it's just a different set of





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   1   circumstances, different clients.



   2            I join him on the point that simply this issue is



   3   whether a subpoena is likely to produce evidence that may be



   4   relevant to penalty, but we do not intend to issue a similar



   5   subpoena on behalf of our client or similar class of



   6   subpoenas.



   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, what I would point out



   8   is if you look at the statute concerning the penalty phase,



   9   3592, two things that I would emphasize is that 3592(A)(8),



  10   when it discusses what may be offered in terms of mitigating



  11   factors, describe the factors as "factors in the defendant's



  12   background, record or character, or any other circumstance of



  13   the offense that mitigate against imposition of death



  14   sentence," and the way I understand Mr. Baugh's argument, he



  15   seems to construe "circumstance" of the world.  Once we go



  16   down a road of --



  17            THE COURT:  What does "any other circumstance of the



  18   offense," what -- that's a very inclusive term, isn't it?



  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  It is, your Honor, but there is a



  20   limit.  "Circumstance of the offense" concerns a plot to bomb



  21   embassies in Nairobi.  It does not mean that we try before the



  22   jury, where the statute still provides that the evidence is



  23   excluded if the probative value is outweighed by a danger of



  24   unfair prejudice and confusion to the issues, that we try



  25   world history.





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   1            Do we try the U.S. bombing of Iraq?  Do we then prove



   2   up the response of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, invasion of



   3   the Kurds?  Do we counterbalance that with whether the U.S.



   4   did become involved in Serbia and Bosnia?  Do we go back to



   5   World War II?  Where do we stop trying warfare?  This is not



   6   warfare.  This is terrorism.  This is not conduct of lawful



   7   authority.



   8            It seems to me that to the extent it's relevant to



   9   discuss Mr. al-'Owhali's motivation, he has that information.



  10   He knows what he thought.  He has Mr. Bin Laden's statements.



  11   And if we focus on the practical, when we look at the



  12   airplanes in Saudi Arabia, we all know there are airplanes



  13   there.  Whether there is hundreds, or 1,000 or 10,000 is not



  14   relevant right now if Mr. al-'Owhali had the belief that they



  15   were there.  That fact we put before the jury.



  16            But to go down a path where we are rummaging upside



  17   down all over the government to get discovery of something of



  18   which the relevant material he already knows, he knows what he



  19   believes, he knows what he's read, he knows what he's been



  20   influenced by, and that could be put before the jury.



  21            The relevance in McVeigh is a very analogous



  22   circumstance.  They also addressed the issue of what evidence



  23   the defendant might offer in opposition to evidence of an



  24   aggravated factor, but it does not say that I can try world



  25   history.  This is an offense.  His background should be before





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   1   the jury, his record, his history, and the circumstances of



   2   the offense.



   3            THE COURT:  Mr. Baugh argues that the government is



   4   going to assert a lack of remorse as a ground for imposition



   5   of the death penalty and argues that to deal with the issue of



   6   lack of remorse, which is as of the time the jury speaks,



   7   involves consideration of events subsequent to the bombing.



   8   What is your response to that?



   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  And to the extent that his own lack



  10   of remorse, his mind-set is influenced by what he knows has



  11   happened after the bombing, he has that information.  If, for



  12   example, he -- it doesn't matter whether there are 12



  13   airplanes or 2,000 in Saudi Arabia as of today, it's his



  14   belief.  I don't think we need to go out and gather



  15   information he's unaware of, hand it to him and then have him



  16   say, now I'm truly not remorseful because I've learned more.



  17            If he believes that there are planes in Saudi Arabia



  18   and they have not left, and that's true, he has that



  19   information.  He knows that.  If he has a belief as to a



  20   number, he has that.  Whether it's accurate or not is



  21   irrelevant.  His lack of remorse comes from what his



  22   understanding of the facts are, and he knows that.



  23            And the lack of remorse is often in the context of



  24   future dangerousness in the case, but I don't think we have to



  25   get past his lack of remorse.  He knows what is influencing





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   1   his own belief that he is not sorry for what he did.



   2            THE COURT:  I'm going to ask, Mr. Baugh, that you



   3   submit another set of subpoenas, because even if one accepts



   4   your contentions, you a number of times said to the Court, you



   5   know, we know these documents exist because we have them



   6   already.



   7            MR. BAUGH:  We have indications of them.



   8            THE COURT:  It seems to me that, in all respect, that



   9   insofar as the military operations are concerned, that there's



  10   really very little you need to make your argument.  You don't



  11   need the minutia.  Whether the cost was X billion dollars or Y



  12   billion dollars is really not going to be relevant, and the



  13   number of aircraft and the number of air carriers and what it



  14   cost really is really not necessary.  It will simply generate



  15   a tremendous amount of good faith litigation on both sides as



  16   to whether that information is classified or is not



  17   classified.



  18            With respect to the subpoenas directed to the news



  19   agencies, I will sign those.  They have not been reluctant to



  20   challenge when they think it's appropriate.



  21            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, I would like you to



  22   reconsider your ruling for these grounds.



  23            THE COURT:  Yes.



  24            MR. BAUGH:  First, the United States just stood here



  25   and, in response to my requests, cited 3592(a)(8), talking





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   1   about what can be offered in mitigation.



   2            THE COURT:  Yes.



   3            MR. BAUGH:  We're not talking about mitigation, we're



   4   talking about negating aggravator.  Secondly, the Court says



   5   that I --



   6            THE COURT:  Mr. Baugh, in all respect --



   7            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



   8            THE COURT:  -- do you quarrel with the proposition



   9   that it is irrelevant to your argument, the argument which you



  10   would propose to make, what the exact cost was?  And you know



  11   you're going to get an answer from the Department of Defense,



  12   which will, of course, object, but then say, in order to come



  13   up with such a compilation, we're going to need, you know, six



  14   months.



  15            MR. BAUGH:  The answer to that, if I might, first, I



  16   agree with you that I do not need that information to make an



  17   argument.  I would submit I need that information to win the



  18   argument.  And the purpose is not to make the argument, it is



  19   to keep him from dying.  And so --



  20            THE COURT:  I'm aware that this is a capital case.



  21   Were this not a capital case --



  22            MR. BAUGH:  We wouldn't be having this argument.  I



  23   would be home.



  24            THE COURT:  This would have ended much earlier,



  25   right.





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   1            MR. BAUGH:  Is that a motion?  Because I'll second



   2   it.



   3            THE COURT:  No.  I don't have to prepare a defense



   4   case.  I have lots of time and I've got a calendar which, you



   5   are aware, is virtually exclusively directed to this case.



   6   But I don't know how much time you have to spend arguing about



   7   the estimated cost in United States dollars of air strikes in



   8   Iraq since the Gulf War cease fire, including weapons cost,



   9   aircraft fuel and support services for air strikes, including



  10   unmanned missile attacks.



  11            Now, I know the process of sitting back to prepare a



  12   subpoena or request for a bill of particulars or so on in



  13   which one create actively engages in the process of thinking,



  14   what --



  15            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor --



  16            THE COURT:  Let me just finish the sentence.



  17            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  18            THE COURT:  What possibly could I ask for?



  19            Now, if you are telling me that these are the



  20   subpoenas and you're not going to change a word of these



  21   subpoenas, the task before this Court is very, very easy.  Is



  22   that what you are telling me?



  23            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, I'm not going to say that,



  24   but I will tell the Court this.  For the Court to assume that



  25   the United States Pentagon has not prepared a budget for this





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   war --



   2            THE COURT:  That is not what you are asking for.



   3            MR. BAUGH:  I want to know how much money is being



   4   spent.



   5            THE COURT:  Now, a request of the future budget, I'm



   6   sure that would be of great interest.



   7            MR. BAUGH:  I want to go back and look at the past



   8   budgets.  I don't want their future budget.  I'm not asking



   9   for it.



  10            And your Honor, lastly, you say how much time have I



  11   spent?  What I'm asking for is burdensome on me and it's



  12   burdensome on the government.  However, my client --



  13            THE COURT:  The argument that you have made this



  14   morning --



  15            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  16            THE COURT:  -- I'm going to try to state it again,



  17   because if I still have it wrong then I would like to have it



  18   right --



  19            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  20            THE COURT:  -- is that you want to put before the



  21   jury evidence that the United States has engaged in types of



  22   warfare directed against Iraq; that this warfare included the



  23   utilization of weapons of mass destruction; that civilians



  24   were killed; that the nature of the targets and the nature of



  25   the warfare is such that one could reasonably contemplate that





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   1   some civilians would be killed; and that the United States



   2   continues to have a military presence in the Arabian



   3   peninsula; and that the United States continues to impose



   4   sanctions against Iraq which cause hardship, and, you say, the



   5   totality of that is such that the jury should view the



   6   aggravating factor of use of a weapon of mass destruction



   7   causing the death of civilians in the context of a warfare, a



   8   warfare between a governmental and a quasi governmental



   9   agency.



  10            Is that a fair statement of what your argument is?



  11            MR. BAUGH:  No, sir.



  12            THE COURT:  No?



  13            MR. BAUGH:  What I'm saying is that I have met the



  14   threshold of looking to determine whether or not that issue



  15   can be successfully argued.  No, I am not arguing



  16   admissibility.  I am not arguing that I'm going to present



  17   this defense.  I am saying that under the rules, I have the



  18   right to look --



  19            THE COURT:  But, you know, I also have some



  20   obligations.



  21            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.



  22            THE COURT:  An obligation not to impose on reasonably



  23   high-level governmental officials the burden of complying with



  24   a subpoena in this detail, most of which, it seems to me, is



  25   unnecessary for the purposes of the argument you are





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   considering making.



   2            MR. BAUGH:  Thank you, your Honor.



   3            THE COURT:  Okay.



   4            MR. BAUGH:  I would --



   5            THE COURT:  Will you do that?



   6            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.  Reserving my objection, of



   7   course.  Yes, sir, I will.



   8            THE COURT:  And when will you have that to me?



   9            MR. BAUGH:  I can't do it tomorrow.  My secretary



  10   lost her grandmother, but I will it by Tuesday.



  11            THE COURT:  All right.  I will sign the subpoenas



  12   directed to the photographic department of the -- I don't know



  13   what.  The subpoena directed to Ms. Kelly?  I'm not familiar



  14   with the name.



  15            MR. BAUGH:  It's an organization in Chicago called



  16   Voices of the Wilderness.



  17            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, just for the record, I



  18   recognize there were subpoenas which we were not provided



  19   copies of and there are some that we were.  Whatever the



  20   photographic department is, we were not given a copy of that,



  21   just so the record is clear.



  22            MR. BAUGH:  Oh, yes, that's true.



  23            THE COURT:  That's true?



  24            MR. BAUGH:  That's true.



  25            THE COURT:  I think you were given copies only of the





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   1   subpoenas to governmental entities.



   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, the Department of Defense,



   3   former Secretary of State and the Bureau of Prisons were the



   4   subpoenas we received.  And I understand the Bureau of Prisons



   5   is reviewing the subpoenas to get back to us, as they said in



   6   the letter.



   7            THE COURT:  All right.



   8            MR. COHN:  That's mine, your Honor.  The government



   9   has no objection to it.



  10            MR. FITZGERALD:  That's correct, Judge.  That's an



  11   update of an old subpoena for Mr. Al-'Owhali's prison records.



  12            THE COURT:  I am not signing the subpoenas directed



  13   to present or ex government officials.  That includes



  14   Madeleine Albright.



  15            On another topic.



  16            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, can my client be excused at



  17   this time?  I have a lot of work to do on these subpoenas.



  18            THE COURT:  I think we're almost finished.  It



  19   depends on Mr. Submit.



  20            Mr. Schmidt, we had some colloquy on Tuesday when



  21   talking about a timetable and you said it was all subject to



  22   the status of discovery requests that you had made which had



  23   not been complied with, and I said I don't want to make any



  24   statements or commitments to the jury with respect to



  25   timetable and then discover that there was going to be an





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   application for a continuance and that I was available, and



   2   what is the story?



   3            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, we had further discussions



   4   with the government yesterday.  As to some of the material



   5   concerning statements made by others, whether exculpatory or



   6   806 or impeachment, the government told me yesterday that they



   7   have been reviewing the documents and they are going to make



   8   them available as soon as they complete their review.  I'm not



   9   sure exactly when that is.



  10            The reason why it took them until now, the government



  11   obviously have been pressing their case and they now seem to



  12   be working on it.  I don't have an answer when they are going



  13   to have that material turned over to us.  So maybe they can



  14   answer that question.



  15            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, as to those materials to



  16   which he is entitled, we are reviewing them to determine what



  17   he is entitled to.  We intend to have them available -- today



  18   is Thursday -- a week from tomorrow.  We have to focus on the



  19   April 3rd submission, the bifurcation motion for Mr. Ruhnke,



  20   and then the 806 demands and the demands for review of any



  21   materials that may exist that may contain Brady with regard to



  22   his client.



  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  As to receipt of it, if the material



  24   itself is self-inclusive and you decide that we are free to



  25   use it and we can either get a stipulation that the witness is





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   available, that will not present any problems.  If the



   2   material is something that requires us to go another step,



   3   which we don't know now, it may or may not present a time



   4   problem.  I can't say.



   5            We're still working on the last major piece, which is



   6   a stipulation concerning Somalia.  We hit some roadblocks.  We



   7   are hoping to have further discussions, I guess tomorrow, and



   8   hope to resolve that.  If we don't resolve that, there is the



   9   order of the Court relating to discovery material that the



  10   government is supposed to turn over.  We'll have to deal with



  11   that issue if we can't reach a stipulation.



  12            I don't know what to say to your Honor as to how long



  13   the government will take to turn over that material if they



  14   are required to.



  15            THE COURT:  All right.  Just one other unrelated



  16   matter --



  17            MR. SCHMIDT:  One other matter, your Honor.  There is



  18   apparently ex parte discussions that the government wants to



  19   have with your Honor concerning Sudan, which we'll want to



  20   deal with that next week as well.  We can do that in chambers



  21   ex parte one after the other, I guess, and make arrangements



  22   for that.



  23            THE COURT:  I just want to present one other thing



  24   which deals with the defense case on behalf of Odeh and the



  25   question of permissible cross-examination of Agent Gaudin, and





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1   that's a matter which I want to address well in advance of



   2   that matter being before the jury.  And I'm sure that's in



   3   everyone's best interests, so that sometime next week I would



   4   like to take that issue up with counsel.



   5            You want to see me about some ex parte matter now?



   6            MR. WILFORD:  Your Honor, not an ex parte matter, but



   7   Mr. Herman has a matter.



   8            MR. HERMAN:  Can we see you in the robing room about



   9   a CIPA matter having to do with Mr. Odeh?



  10            THE COURT:  About a CIPA matter?



  11            MR. HERMAN:  With the government.



  12            THE COURT:  CIPA.



  13            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, before they do that, one



  14   housekeeping -- I don't think we're involved in the CIPA



  15   argument.  Just one housekeeping matter.  Mr. Fitzgerald has



  16   told me that they will respond to the motion for separate



  17   penalty phases by next Friday.  We would like until the



  18   following Friday to reply to that, and that's okay with the



  19   government.



  20            THE COURT:  All right.



  21            MR. RUHNKE:  Thank you.



  22            THE COURT:  Yes.  All right.  We'll adjourn, then,



  23   except for the ex parte matter, until Monday morning.



  24            MR. HERMAN:  Judge, Mr. Odeh should be permitted to



  25   stay to review certain evidence.





                  SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (212) 805-0300

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   1            THE COURT:  All right.



   2            (Conference in the robing room filed under seal)



   3            (Adjourned to April 2, 2001, at 10:00 a.m.)



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